After waiting, check the three slices of apple.
What do you notice about them? Have they all gone brown? Why/why not?

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A simple way to look at why fruit goes brown

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Why Does This Happen?

When you cut up an apple, the cells inside it become exposed to the air. The air, as we know, contains a lot of oxygen. When oxygen enters the cells of the apple, it reacts with some of the chemicals in them, and this chemical reaction ends up making a brown chemical product. This chemical reaction is called oxidation.

The apple in the bowl by itself turns very brown, because the air has got easy access into the cells of the apple.

The apple that’s covered with water goes brown a little less and a little slower. Obviously, the air isn’t able to get into the apple cells because the water is in the way. However, there’s also oxygen dissolved in the water. The oxygen in the water gets into the apple cells, and causes them to turn brown in the same way as the air. (This oxygen is the same gas that fish breathe with their gills).

The lemon juice contains a chemical call ascorbic acid. You’ve probably heard of it from its other name: Vitamin C. There is some oxygen dissolved in the lemon juice, just like in the water. In this case however, the oxygen can react with two different chemicals: the chemicals inside the cells of the apple, and the Vitamin C. The oxygen actually prefers to oxidise the Vitamin C, and so the oxygen reacts with this first. Eventually, all the Vitamin C gets oxidised and used up, and the oxygen starts browning the apple again. If you leave the apple for longer than half an hour (like say, overnight) you’ll see this take place. The fact that the Vitamin C keeps the apple fresher for longer makes it a preservative.

There are many chemicals we use to preserve food.

Some are antioxidants like Vitamin C, which stop the oxidation reactions that can spoil food.

Others are antimicrobial, chemicals that kill the bacteria that can grow on food.